At its September ‘19 launch event, Apple said this is the fastest chip ever in a smartphone.
The iPhone 11 Pro packs the new A13 chipset, making it the fastest iPhone yet. (Image credit: Techradar) iPhone 11 Pro vs Samsung Galaxy S10 performance Video capture on both is good and detailed, and will be more than enough for most use cases. With such a large variety of lenses on offer, there isn’t a situation that either device will be unable to cope with. Apple tends toward more natural colors and warmer hues, while Samsung amps up the sharpness and contrast in its images, each tends to a different preference in taste.īoth have night modes, though in testing we found Apple’s to be a little more consistent in its capabilities, even if the Samsung proved to be no slouch. Performance from both is at a flagship level, at every level of zoom, difference between the two will largely be subjective to a preference in photo style. Each has a similarly sized primary 12MP sensor, though only the Samsung sports a variable aperture, with telephoto and wide-angle sensors in tow. Nary a device today arrives without at least a ‘Quad-AI camera’ sticker attached.īoth the Galaxy S10 and iPhone 11 Pro arrive with a trio of cameras attached. Samsung Galaxy S10 (Image credit: Future) iPhone 11 Pro vs Samsung Galaxy S10 cameraĪdding more lenses to the mix is a new trend for smartphones which is unlikely to disappear. Both boast excellent colour reproduction, strong brightness and contrast and are excellent for almost any use-case. Telling the difference between the two is a fools game, these are both some of the best panels available at any price point. The Samsung Galaxy S10’s 1,440 x 3,040 pixels are bigger than the 1,125 x 2,436 pixels in the iPhone 11 Pro - which makes sense, given the former has a bigger screen than the latter. Overall, this is an OLED vs OLED battle, and though the resolution figures differ, they by in large look great. It’s more attractive than a notch, and the best compromise this side of workarounds like pop-up cameras or exposing lenses by sliding down the front screen. Sadly, those early rumors were correct: Apple has kept the notch, which looks larger than ever in a year where phonemakers strained to give users more and more screen.Īs for the Samsung Galaxy S10, the front-facing camera has been reduced to a single punch-hole in the top right of the display, while the fingerprint node on the back has been eliminated in favor of an in-screen sensor. The iPhone 11 Pro’s 5.8-inch OLED screen looks sharper than ever, and it’s even got a new marketing-approved name, 'Super Retina XDR'. IPhone 11 Pro (Image credit: Techradar) iPhone 11 Pro vs Samsung Galaxy S10 display